Again, not accurate as I have been in MULTIPLE scools that competed in it and the kicking art(s) combined with boxing were very diverse. Starting with TKD,Savate, Kyokushin, Shoryn Ryu and Shodokan (BTW Karate is very broad, just as you have listed them above in various styles).

With a little reasearch you will find that there are but a few "pure" systems. Just because it has a traditional name does not insure a pure system.

All purity means is that it is still taught by the same principles that the original founder used, and sometimes by the founder himself. Each successor in the system changes what they dislike and keeps what they like.

With that in mind, if you find a system that is taught by the founder or the founders ancestor/s you will find about as close to a pure system as you can get.

With that said I dont believe I have 10, but here are my choices based on real combat effectivness and proven results.

Please explain how Kickboxing is "pure"? Muay Thai would be the closest thing to it as a "pure" art. The American version is hodge podge combining boxing with any art that uses kicks.

I said that is "pure" because is not Mixed Martial Arts. In MMA is used Kickboxing or Muay Thai combined with other martial arts like wrestling and BJJ. And anyway Kickboxing was created in Japan, is not a combination between martial arts.

_________________________
The harder you train, the harder it is to surrender.

Please explain how Kickboxing is "pure"? Muay Thai would be the closest thing to it as a "pure" art. The American version is hodge podge combining boxing with any art that uses kicks.

I said that is "pure" because is not Mixed Martial Arts. In MMA is used Kickboxing or Muay Thai combined with other martial arts like wrestling and BJJ. And anyway Kickboxing was created in Japan, is not a combination between martial arts.

A History of KickboxingBy: Maeve RichThe history of kickboxing differs depending on the area of origin you're talking about. Kickboxing hasn't been around for too long altogether, making it relatively easy to trace its roots. Although it is clear that a form of kickboxing originated in Japan, some people believe that this form of kickboxing is different from today's kickboxing, which they say started in the U.S.

Many believe that kickboxing developed in Japan. According to these people, kickboxing is a derivative of several martial arts, most notably one known as Muay Thai. In the late 1950s, karate expert Osamu Noguchi set about designing a form of karate that would allow opponents to hit one another. He, along with a fighter by the name of Kenji Kurosaki developed kickboxing after watching three of Noguchi's Muay Thai fighters lose to Japan's karate fighters. The original name for what would later become kickboxing was karate-boxing.

Those who believe the history of kickboxing begins in the U.S. claim that the sport developed years later, in the 1970s. American karate fighters were looking for a form of martial arts that would allow full contact. At first, the risk of serious injury in kickboxing led to protests about the new sport. Rules were updated to make kickboxing safer and protective gear became a part of the sport.

It was around this time that the Kickboxing Association was founded in Japan. The sport was broadcast on television and enjoyed popularity for awhile. The attention people paid to kickboxing waned when kickboxer Tadashi Sawamura retired, and it remained on the back burner of sports until the 1990s.

Today, kickboxing has made a return. It has spread across the world, becoming popular in a large number of countries outside of Japan and the U.S. Aerobic kickboxing, inspired by the martial art, has become a fitness craze in the U.S. as well as other countries.

According to the article above it most certainly IS a comniation of MA's. Of course there are others that say the Original kickboxing is Muay Thai and others that say Chinese Boxing (Kung Fu) is the original kickboxing. I think it is clear though that it is indeed a form of MMA as is Jeet Kune Do.